ROSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1925. 8 n'iHIBIome'Owiiers! ,. There. is an old saying, that a new broom sweeps clean. This is true. , For quick action, either for sale or exchange of your property list it yith us. Z. " - ' ' . A number of buyers whose names are in our files want to purchase a Some Sn Roaeburg, perhaps your place is just what one of them wants. - Thirty days should be sufficient to sell city property with my system. . Let me show you : why the reason is very simple. We have a very thorough system for marketing your property and can get Sou quick results either on a cash sale or exchange. J Write, call or phone.' ' ' E. '. 224 Perkins BIdg. I MM) Br- -SCORE 13 Tfl B The Roseburg high school foot ball team made Its best showing no far this year In the game play ed at Ashland yesterday. Although the Ashland team won the contest 13 to D, the Koseburg players dem onstrated a great Improvement, - I at any other time during the sea - !" In the first quarter the local boys watf-the advantage. Working a crisscross play and an over-the-Hne pass, they earrle! the ball to Ashland's three-yard line, only to lose It ml a fumble. Several times to thJ flrat half they threatened the Ashland goal. They were handi capped1, -however, by the lack of a fast backfleld man for end runs, Maynard Bell, who usually carries the ball on the end playa, being out with an, injured hip. In th . third quarter the Ashland team came back strong, and put over two touchdowns. The -Roseburg team stiffened Its opposition, however, and stopped further . Upon the hill-top your vision grows. For miles and ---L: miles you see the work of man and nature. Down in the valley your view is limited by the hills, by your neigh r.h." bor's home by the store across the way. This newspaper properly used will guide you to V"-'..'" the hill-top. Read it and your vision is enlarged. You get a bird's-eye view of world events. You glimpse all the do ing of the days. ..T'". Fail to use it, and your view is limited to the things '..:.. around home. You remain in ignorance, not only of events -- here and abroad, but of much that concerns you even more vitally--news of the very things that have to do j with your personal, every day life. !! :' Someone might be selling a new, better and more -economical food; or a utensil that would add immcasur ; ably to your comfort and well being; or some better ma V. "' terial for shoes or clothing but you would never know because of your restricted view. ;-, 0, Yu may read every line of the news, but if you over- !k the advertising, you are still living in the valley. You J, remain uninformed about many things you ought to know !: in order to live a happy, useful, profitable life in this age I! of progress. ; Read the advertisements and know everything ; that goes on in the market-place. EosebubgSIws I ' " fcfPOUQLAS COUNTY Farmers Note! . Open Evenings K. McLENDON REAL ESTATE V-For Belter Homes See scoring. A big Improvement was shown In the Roseburg lino which was Impenetrable The Ashland team was absolutely unable to gain yard age through the line, and made all its gains on end runs and passes. The Iloseburg team made first downs frequently, and proved su perior to the Ashland team In line plunging. The team a greatest weasness lies in the lack of speed In the backfleld, and Inability to break up forward passea. With a good fast l man In the backfleld to carry end runs the team would be much bet ter equipped to meet all opposi tion. The local boys In every game this year have evidenced a decided physical superiority over any team met. In each game opposing teams hmwm hu.ii mniunlla forreil In Ink - ; . . . ' hll, ,. R burg playera are seldom ever hurt. Ashley Tabor yesterday austalned a broken nose, the only serious In jury on the part of the Koseburg playera. Heat with g&s. NOTICE I will halfsole men's shoes for 75 cents; lady'a shoea for tin cents; rubber heels 35 cents, leather heels 25 cents. J. W. Hall, 112 Ilnwen street, Koseburg. .Heat with ga. "Up Top" Advertisements bring the wares of the world to your doorstep for your inspection mmmimv s Phone 124-J d "Mac" PORTLAND MEN SUSTAIN INJURIES IN AUTO WRECK W. J. Roop and Irving Preble, bolh connected with the United states Rubber company, were In J I'd last night when their car went over a grade on Camas moun tain. , They were rounding a turn when the Hunts of an approaching car blinded them. The road was partly obscured by fog, and being unable to see, they drove off the edge and rolled down fifty feet or mora. Doth men were badly ahaken and bruised and are suffering from nu merous cuts. Fortunately their in juries are not necessarily of a se rious nature. They were brought to Mercy hospital where their In juries were attended by Ur. E. B. Stewart. American Bulldog The American bulldog or pit bull-dog, because of the old snort of fighting them In pita Is one of the few breeds ot dugs of distinctly American origin, and one of the first developed In this country. It Is the product ot a crossing of the English bulldog with the hull ter rier, the subsequent Introduction of an additional struln of English bulldog ancestry giving the Ameri can bull Its weight unci Its shorter mutxle nnd larger head. Hut the breed now runs very true, nnd litis for umny years, and there la not much exper'-nentlng with It. Review Earh Georgia Settler Picked Location Wuely In 1833 1'lckrns county, Georgia, was peopled by the Cherokee In dium. In that year, one Kain Tute yiuimeu in uou semeu eiui nine. J I from any other white neighbor, lie (j u Drat on the ground when the government uioveu lite ciieruseeii out to Indian territory In 1887. lie stuked off hla pick of the lands left by the Iiidluna, and la 1 cluini embraced, among other tliltiK. the nnest niarule deposit In the united B'ule uml one of the most valu able In the world. It atlll belongs to the Tute family. Ttifre la only one rein of Georgia uiurhle. and the old man got It all a solid block j iiiree-eigmiis of a tulle wide. lour miles long and two hundred feer to a hulf-uitle deep, the estimated wortb of which toduy, according to experts, runs up to Slli,UilU,Oiiu,. 000, and Is atlll runulng. .It has been worked now for more than flfty years and in all thut time tliev time onlv emt.-htwl iIia sue. face of ubout three acres of It. I They have dug out of It such build ings aa the Corcoran Art gallery and the I'un-Anieiicun building In Washington, the Rhode Inland state jj onpltnl, the New York rllock ex j rhange, the Federal Unserve banks Ki of Cleveland and Atlamu, the Field K museum In Chicago, the Klutue of Sf f'lvlA Virion In V...lr ..Itu nn.l thousands of lesser monuments, but ! ymi would Imrtlly know It. W. O. rmunuera In Culller a. Much Care and. Taste Pat Into Panama Hat Count ink the number of rfns of j tmndH In the crown reveals the I quality of panatna huts. The more j of these there are lite better the crude. Color, texture nnd fdiaie tire Important fact on, too, and If ! any broken struws lire revealed j the viilue In decreased, says the i New Haven Keirlster. Furthermore, j a good paiiuuia hat Is never bleached 1 after being woven. Those of j sufterlnr grade nre the orlelnul color of the little strips of leaves from I n dwarf palm-tree plant that grows i In Kcuador and other South nnd I Central American countries where i the natives weave the twst huts. j It takes three months or more to j tllilHh those of the highest quality. All the work in done by band and ! only the bext and longest fitter Is ; uH. ! Iteprt that the mntf expensive ' hats urn woven only by cundle light or under water are sabl to be erro-. neous. However, the straw Is kept damp und ot night the unfinished ' hats are hunif where they will be i exposed to the dew so tbnt they I can be worked on without dancer of breaking the strands the following ; day. 1 Lottery Once Harvard Aid An Interesting bit of Infortnntlon regarding the early histury of Har vard college Is derived from an edition of the Columbian Kentinel, a weekly newspaper, printed In Hos ton. September 14. 1711. It stntes that when tieorgo Washington was President of the Tnited Ktute Harvard college was supporting It-1 self partly by grand lotteries, with n nnt.lli.l nlsk t-IHlliyi Tli-,v- were sold for 23 cents, says the Boston Clohe. I The four-page papers of thnf day, I with nilvprtiseiuents confined large ly to miction sales, contained much material In brief. There were no large headlines nnd news from i Mimi. linn gnc ry smp, was often many months old. Hie Ixsue of September 14. l.ink ns an example carried n news Item stating that on the J..tb of June (the latest date) flenenil Ilonaparte was at Thieves Cart A way House ' The durinc nnd the Ingenuity of1 modern thieves iktiihJou frequent j surprise for the police of varbju ' ; cities. Artb-tes picked up and 1 I carted away run ye from things 1 ; whose apparent value to any other than the rluhiful owner would ' seem nil, to things so huge thit It ; would appear almost Impossible to I conceal them. A complaint recent : Iv tiled with the Purls nollco hv a Mine. Cabert said that her whole1 bouse had been stolen, says the J New York Times. Mine. Cnhert i i stated that she had built a Innise of wood In the Hue de la Caltpe- 1 trie re. She was called away to visit n dying mint and when she returned the house had disappeared. Not Guilty Child naivete Is always delicious. Take, for example, the little girl who forgot that her mother had said she did not wish to be dis turbed during siesta hour. The child forgot and went nnd taped on the diwr, only to be sharply reminded when her mother woke up and demanded to know who was knocking. "It little now." wiis me. mother, cried the one quickly, "lint It nln't Charming Thought It was nflcr dinner nnd the tnlk hnd turned t iylnicyy. This illsturhihir iinctliwi liud just been put: "When tlm'S tild nge really begin?" To etnMIli n formula was prov ing mthcr flllnctilt, nhen one tmty. ho did not look tier years. founV the follow Inn: Tn me. old nixe Is always Hfteen years older than I Bin." fynino, Tiirls. Li All the Rett "The very thiMicht of marriage alsrma me. Kanry having a hus hnnd l.hoiit the place flay In. day out." "Kon'l yon worry, dear. If you marry Jack It w.ll soon he dnv In, ulkiil out. with lilin." l.rt.l.Hi Mall. Thrifty Wife 'I hear you huve a thrifty little wife." "Yciili. Only last week she saved $.10 l.v hujlng a coat for $diio." Uulsllle t'ourler Journal. Read the Gassified ada in Trie News-Review. The, I mean dollar to you. C011U1 KEEP I - - ! '. Word, Wrongly Spelled "I have seen lists of the wnrfla moat often misspelled." said a learher quoted In Hie New Ifork Times, "lint In my experience, the one nutat frequently ginned agalnat In nrint I. n n, - I luin mm 1 1mma )t statnpMl mwge' on the , tnanufaclnred tnlda. Th next ; ftrquently nUsvpelted? I dont kaow But fur one tnfrrquently . booy wrtalnly rnnlt high, j .Weinr Mm to It onw peopl lots of tronbifl, and almost every body on teat will misspelt 'deleblo, been dm better acquainted with Us negative. Indelible.' which bat changed Its original spell I or-" Countrywide '' Farm Picnic Idea Grows Country-wide picnics, attend ed by 10,000 farmers and farm wives of Miami county, O., are now annual affairs, and the Idea It being copied tn al least twenty other counties in the state. Above are view, of the parade pre crdinj ie event ' 1 & ! VsJ HELP! (The Ten - in GIYE ENOUGH FOR ALL ! v ; November 3 to 6 ROSEBURG Tradition Long Kept Iladdesley Clinton Is one of the beautiful ancient mouted granges of England. It possesses a prlvnte chapel, where, with one or two short periods of Interruption, mass has been said ever since the days of the Deformation. Hut the Itoman Catholic traditions of another coun try house, the chronicles of which have Jusr been published, are even more remarkable than those of Bad desley Clinton. At East Hendred house, near Abingdon, there Is a private chapel In the grounds which has stood there from the Thirteenth century. Here the Eyston family, who have a private entrance from the library of the house, have wor shiped century after century; nnd It la accepted as a historical fact that the lamp before the altar haa never censed to burn for 8(10 years. No Protestant service has ever been held there; and It was left quite In tact by Cromwell's soldiery when they visited East Hendred. Family Herald. Slanguage and Language Slang la perpetually changing, language much more alowly. The common apoken language of any period, is, as It were, the melting pot from which the pure gold of Ita literary language Is distilled. The slang, having contributed Ita quota, dies, but the literary language Uvea on. It haa emerged from the cruci ble pure coin forever. Any great langunge. such aa (ireek or Latin. Is eternal, for In tlie handa at a master It becomes a thing of power, a vehicle for the living truth. And once that truth haa poured through It, It la Immortal, a radiant garment of thought, no longer the tongue merely of merchanta and artisans, but the speech of gods and heroes. Nineteenth Century. Creen Grocer "Have you any nice fresh eggs to day?" asked the hreesy customer, ".Madam," nnwered the man who bad Just atarted In the grocery business, "permit me to remind you that nice eggs are necessarily fresh and fresh eggs always nice. Moreover. If I have any I have them today. My possession of eggs yes terday or tomorrow does not alTect the situation, therefore" "Humph !" snorted tbe woman as she started for the door, "eggs are not the only freh things In this store. I'll do my trading else where." Boston Transcript. Wife Add to Hi Fame llepplewhlte was one of the emi nent furniture finishers and design ers who nourished lin 'er the reign of the Georges In Knglsnd. anil whose furniture was In vogue about tbe time of the A merlin n He volu tion. When he dfcd In l'sa his wife carried on hla work and produced other pieces and original designs that were very popnlar for several decades. Much of the llepplewhlte work was done In mahoganies and in lltht woods. ITY CHEST - One Drive) .f ABOVE WATER! r 4 Small can do a hi businesv arts van Thousands ,oF Salesmen X?0er0 copy) of this nevri nrwgr paper is a gooa saics III I III II HM I LODGE DIRECTORY J Knights of Pythias, Alpha Lodgl No. 47. Meets every Wednes day In Knights of Pythias ball 180 Rose street. Visitors always welcomed. SAM CHRI3TENSON, C. C. ROY O. YOUNO. M. F. K. B. W1MBB"I,,Y. K. B 3 Laurel Chapter No. 31, R. A. M. Meets every third Tuesday of each month In Masonic Temple. All members requested to attend and visiting companions wel-i come. I A. A. WILDER. High Priest, i W. P. HARRIS. Secretary. A. F. aV A. as. Laura Locge No 13. Regular commtmlratloni second and fourth Wednesday! each month, at Masonic Temple Roseburg, Ore. Visitors wel come. M. 8. HA MM. W. M. W. r, HARRIS, flee I. O. O. Phlleterlan Lodge Na . Meeta In Odd Fallows Tern pie every Friday evening. Visit Ing brethern are alwaya wel come C. F. CRAMER, N. O. A. J. 0EDDE3, Rec Sec. I R BAII.KV s-tn Ree vioi.a kti-otnernweo of Csroenteci end Jjlntere of America. Meets at 471 8. Main second tod fourth Tuesday evenings ot each mi to. All carpenter wel corned. T P HOLMr , Rec Bee. EMERY COLE, Prea. ROSEBCKO LODGE NO. 10TT L O. O. M. Meets every Wrdnesda) night Moose Hall. 148 N. Jack eon St Cbab rooms open T:t0 ti in p ox visiting brothers wel coma. W. A. POOARD. IHctator. H O. PAROETER. Secretary JNO M. THRONE. Treasurer vOC"a7oTt7W. floMnirt Ra view Na. 11-Hold. resulai roeeflnsw on seened and fnnrtl Thursdays a 7:10 p. m. Visit Ing sisters Invited to attend re views. Waecabee ball. Pine ast Case street!. CLARA nONEBRAKE, Com. JESSnt RAPP. Cot a. sej kin '.An I'-ar umrK. 1 An - Umpqua Klan No. 8. Meet Jn and 4th Mondays of each month. Address p. o. Bog 885. Rose hnre. 'lf-eorm Eagle. Ros.ourg Aeris Meets II Maccabee hall, on Caaa street, on second and fourth Wednes day eveninn of each month, al t o'clock. Visiting brethern li good standing alwavs welcome GLENN WOODRUFF. W. P. THEO. W. ALTHAUS. W. P. B. F. GOODMAN, fieo. Meignosiw n f ooocrsrt. Lllaa Circle No. 49 Meets no first and third Monday evenings, la K. of P. ball. Visiting neighbors Invited to attend AI.VIA WETHERELU O. N. WAROAKBT WHITNFY. Clerks O. E. 8, Roseburg Cnapi.r No. 3, Holds their regular meeting oa the flrat and third Thursdays tn each month. All aojoumlng . brothers and sisters are res pec t fully Invited to attend. CORA B. SINGLETON. W. M. fnw.P! jmmftnN. nenretarr Union aneampment. No. t. I. O. O. F. Meets In Odd Fellows Tens pie on 2nd and 4th Wednesdavl of each month. Visiting Patrt arcbs alwavs welcome. FRED MILLER. C. P. W P WTTTWTTRWUfc BcHM K. O. T. M. Meeta eacn second and fourth Thursday of eack month. In Maccabee hall, cor ner Casa and Pine street. VI Itlng Knights always welcome, L. 0. GOODMAN, O-m. ' W. RAPP. R. K Ur.lt.d Artisana meera tn Mac - Cabee hall first and third Thurs- . daya. Visiting members al wava welcome. MAY PING EL, M. A. MILDRED McCHLLOCH. Treas. BELLE HTFPBENSON Roe 8. P. O. Itlks, Roasourg Longs No. 826. Hold regular comma nlratlone at tb Elk's Temple oi each Thursday of every month, AM member, requested to as tend regularly, and an vtsltln brothers are cordially Invited t ttend i J. 0. DAY, Jr.. E. R, J. T GOODMAN. BeiTeiary aVoAdmeo of tee worTO. cio N '2 Menu tn tbe Odd Pellowt Hall In Rnaebnrg every flrsl and third Unndav erenlng. VI ttln neighbor alway welcome JOHN DEI.L HESS. C C M M Mlt .t.ER Clerk, ossburf R.beKstl Lodge NoTei,' I. O. O. F-eet la Odd Pe nw Temple every welr r Tnesdsy evening. Visiting member In good standing are conH.ttv Invtteft to attend ANNA WICKHAM. N. O. CERTRl'DE HATFIELD, R, 8. EMMA LENOX, P. 8. tai. Bitt.rs,'ompMJS Temple e WM.ets Ui second an fourth Monday erenlng of eack month, at the K. of P. ball, vis ttor alwavs wetma MARTHA CHRI3TEN8KN, M E C EVA MARKS. M. of R. C MAY E. PARKER, H. of W. . jt j t n r s . f ,r x f;.-.